One Guy's Investments

The story of Travis Johnson's investment portfolio, with analysis and thoughts on the stocks and funds I've considered, bought and sold. I don't claim to have brilliant picks that will make you money, and I'm not an investment advisor, registered or otherwise, so don't follow my moves unless you're happy to lose money without suing someone. I'm just one guy. My articles get republished in several places, but always appear here first -- subscribe now(totally free via RSS) to see them before they're on Yahoo Finance.

Friday, March 10, 2006 -- Subscribe free

GOL Scores Again

Interesting week for several of the companies I own and follow -- earnings from a bunch of them, including Middleby and Imax, which I've already written about recently, and a few others.

The most interesting to me at the moment is Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes (GOL -- click to register for free RT streaming quote). This low-cost Brazilian airline is continuing to gain altitude. The ADR has suffered in recent weeks thanks in large part to currency fluctuation and, I imagine, to some profit taking after a remarkable run. I was sorely tempted to buy more when it dipped down below $26 today, and I may still regret not taking that opportunity.

GOL reported more of what they always report -- they are still stimulating demand for air travel in South America by slashing prices, but at the same time they're extremely profitable ... this isn't a company that's operating at a loss in order to gain customers, instead they're achieving the highest margins of any publicly traded airline in the world. Margins continue to be very solid according to their earnings release (net margins of 20% for the fourth quarter), and it's definitely worth listening to their conference call and viewing the presentation (www.voegol.com.br/ir) -- this company is extraordinary at investor disclosure and truly seems to want investors to understand how they work.

There are certainly concerns as well -- expanded air travel in Brazil is very much tied to the performance of the Brazilian economy in general, so a decline there would definitely hurt Gol (though I submit that it would hurt their higher-cost, massively indebted competitors much more). And they pay below-market jet fuel prices thanks to the Petrobras price controls, but those prices are still climbing and they do impact on GOL's profitability.

But overall, I'll remain tempted to build a larger position if we see any more weakness here. GOL is targeting an addressable market that is truly massive -- 20 million potential customers according to their strategic plan, and they're a long way from reaching that goal. They've got about a 30% share of the growing Brazilian domestic market (and climbing) and are able to cut fares but still increase earnings through very strict cost controls ... and that doesn't even take into account their growing international presence across the cone of South America. They pay for their plane leases and maintenance obligations with free cash flow and plan to be able to continue to do so even as their fleet doubles over the next five years, meaning that debt will not be a significant burden for them. They are richly valued compared to most airlines, and though they seem expensive for an "emerging market" stock in some ways at a trailing PE over 20, their earnings growth (projected 2006) of more than 50% certainly justifies that ... and even after a remarkable year, they have still actually underperformed the Brazilian market as a whole thanks to that market's heavy weighting in oil and resource stocks.

Previous GOL articles:
Opened a GOL Position in December
GOL Annual Checkup
Added GOL in January
Scored More GOL in February

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Comments:
Glad to see you still be positive on GOL. I have naked Put positions with a strike of $30 on GOL (which I sold for a premium of $0.50 per contract and they are now trading at an ask of $4.5 thanks to today's action. Hope it reverses some of its weakness next week when the options expire
 
Thanks for the comment. That kind of options trading is a riskier game than I like to play, but I am still very positive about GOL for the long term. In fact, I haven't posted it to the site yet but I made a late purchase on Friday afternoon of a few more GOL shares when they dipped below $25.50 -- the price was just too good to resist.
 
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